Her carefully constructed 'conclusion' is that everything Obama has done is out of some hidden personality trait of simple and amoral power-hunger, and this conclusion then educes whatever new piece she adds to her 'case against Obama'.

Aristotle (in his Poetics) chose this particular play as his prime example of tragedy, because Oedipus, though a king whose fate educes our awe, is enough like us, the audience, to evoke our pity as well.

Carlyle sees in the life of a man his actions, associations, aspirations, disappointments, successes, what deep principles swayed him, what noble or ignoble nature provided his impulses, and wrought his manhood: Emerson tests him by the great problems of the universe, as he understands them, and educes from their application to certain circumstances the character of the man.

The Government which, out of civil war and chaotic strife, brings such advantages -- out of calamity and danger educes such blessings of security and progress will be entitled to the unbounded gratitude of those who will be the chief gainers by its policy.

This modern Platonist, beginning with sensation, evolves his philosophy from within, -- from the finite mind; whereas human history can only be explained in the light of revelation, which gives to humanity faith, but which educes all science from the infinite -- the mind of God.

It educes all the latent strength and virtue in a man (although it is hard on those at home, for when he wins back at supper time there is left in him very little of what the ladies so quaintly call "soul").